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Bread.—Home-made bread is not
so much used now as it was years back. Most housekeepers
have found by experience that it is a waste both of time and
money. There are very few houses among the middle classes
which possess an oven capable of competing with any chance
of success with a baker’s oven. There are, however, many
vegetarians who believe in what is called whole-meal bread.
A good deal of the whole-meal bread sold as such has been
found to be adulterated with substances very unwholesome to
ordinary stomachs. We may mention saw-dust as one of the
ingredients used for the purpose. Again, if you attempt to
make whole-meal bread into loaves, you will find great
difficulty in baking the loaves. This whole-meal is a very
slow conductor of heat, and the result will probably be that
the outside of the loaf will be very hard while the inside
will be too underdone to be eaten. Consequently, should you
wish to have home-made whole-meal bread, it is far best to
bake it in the form of a tea-cake or flat-cake. We cannot do
better, in conclusion, than quote what Sir Henry Thompson
says on this subject:—“The following recipe,” he says, “will
be found successful, probably, after a trial or two, in
producing excellent, light, friable, and most palatable
bread: To two pounds of coarsely ground or crushed
whole-meal, add half a pound of fine flour and a sufficient
quantity of baking powder and salt; when these are well
mixed, rub in two ounces of butter, and make into dough with
half milk and water, or with all milk if preferred. Make
rapidly into flat cakes like ‘tea-cakes,’ and bake without
delay in a quick oven, leaving them afterwards to finish
thoroughly at a lower temperature. The butter and milk
supply fatty matters, in which the wheat is somewhat
deficient; all the saline and mineral matters of the husk
are retained; and thus a more nutritive form of bread cannot
be made. Moreover, it retains the natural flavour of the
wheat, in place of the insipidity which is characteristic of
fine flour, although it is indisputable that bread produced
from the latter, especially in Paris and Vienna, is
unrivalled for delicacy, texture, and colour. Whole meal may
be bought; but mills are now cheaply made for home use, and
wheat may be ground to any degree of coarseness
desired.”
CHAPTER XIV
PIES AND
PUDDINGS
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